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Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2023

Matthew Levering
Affiliation:
University of St Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary, Illinois

Summary

In this book, Matthew Levering unites eschatologically charged biblical Christology with metaphysical and dogmatic Thomistic Christology, by highlighting the typological Christologies shared by Scripture, the Church Fathers, and Aquinas. Like the Church Fathers, Aquinas often reflected upon Jesus in typological terms (especially in his biblical commentaries), just as the New Testament does. Showing the connections between New Testament, Patristic, and Aquinas’s own typological portraits of Jesus, Levering reveals how the eschatological Jesus of biblical scholarship can be integrated with Thomistic Christology. His study produces a fully contemporary Thomistic Christology that unites Ressourcement and Thomistic modes of theological inquiry, thereby bridging two schools of contemporary theology that too often are imagined as rivals. Levering's book reflects and augments the current resurgence of Thomistic Christology as an ecumenical project of relevance to all Christians.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

Introduction

This book has a simple argument: Contemporary Catholic and Protestant Thomistic Christology is an immensely promising development, and it should now be enhanced by a fuller integration of biblical typologies (the New Adam, New Isaac, New Moses, New Joshua, and New David) in order to do justice to the New Testament’s eschatological portraits of Jesus.

When I first conceived this book, I intended to argue that Thomas Aquinas should have included more attention to the New Testament’s Christological typologies in his tertia pars, because this would have allowed him to do fuller justice to the eschatological character of Jesus’ identity and mission. Aquinas knew these typologies well, and he could have integrated them into his tertia pars. On reflection, however, I realized that my concern is not actually with Aquinas himself in his time and place but with contemporary Thomistic Christology. In order to fully convey Jesus’ eschatological identity and mission, Thomistic Christology needs to incorporate the typological materials found especially in Aquinas’s biblical commentaries. This is not a competition between the tertia pars and the biblical commentaries, since, as we will see, the eschatological insights conveyed by the typologies are present in their ontological core within the Summa theologiae. The reconfiguring that I propose in this book is a matter of figural enhancement and augmentation, not of laying new foundations. My proposal accords with Thomas Joseph White’s call for theologians to “seek a progressive unification of classical Christological ‘science’ and modern historical study,” in order to integrate the results of historical and dogmatic approaches “into one coherent narrative.”Footnote 1

Given an understanding of history that allows for God’s providence, the fact that the divine Messiah recapitulates the central figures of Israel’s Scriptures will come as no surprise.Footnote 2 Among the Church Fathers, Irenaeus is representative in teaching that “the treasure hid in the Scriptures is Christ, since He was pointed out by means of types and parables.”Footnote 3 For their part, contemporary biblical scholars recognize that for Second Temple Jews and for the New Testament authors, “God is the mastermind of a vast divine economy that includes both external past-tense events and their inscripturation.”Footnote 4 The New Testament portrays Jesus as the “new” or eschatological Adam, Isaac, Moses, Joshua, and David. For Christians, just as the “New” Testament fulfills but does not negate or replace the “Old,” so also Jesus is the eschatological fulfillment of these central Old Testament figures without negating their own distinctive narrative histories and identities.Footnote 5 Thus the New Testament’s “figural Christology” requires what Richard Hays terms “reading backwards.”Footnote 6

Indebted to the Church Fathers, Aquinas gave explicit attention in his writings to Jesus as the New Adam, Isaac, Moses, Joshua, and David according to the New Testament’s literal sense. Yet, contemporary Thomistic Christology has paid relatively little attention to Jesus’ eschatological fulfillment of these types. Given that “the ‘reign of God’ is the clear and unmistakable central theme of Jesus’ work,”Footnote 7 the question is how to ensure that the reign of God is also a central theme of Thomistic Christology. The theme is by no means absent from Aquinas’s Christology. The tertia pars of the Summa theologiae lacks a distinct quaestio on Jesus as King or on the inauguration of the kingdom of God. But the theme of the reign of God, and the ontological reality expressed by that phrase, appears frequently within Aquinas’s Christological reflections, especially in his discussions of Jesus as the eschatological Moses, Joshua, and David.

My argument is that by incorporating and expanding upon Aquinas’s reflections on the Christological typologies, contemporary Thomistic Christology can meet the challenge identified by White and laid down by the biblical scholar John Meier in the first volume of his A Marginal Jew: “[F]aith in Christ today must be able to reflect on itself systematically in a way that will allow an appropriation of the quest for the historical Jesus into theology. The historical Jesus, while not the object or essence of faith, must be an integral part of modern theology.”Footnote 8 The “historical Jesus” portrayed by Meier and others is an eschatological prophet who understood himself to be inaugurating the kingdom of God. It is this eschatological Jesus that the New Testament’s (and the Church Fathers’ and Aquinas’s) typological Christology depicts in richly nuanced ways. It does so from within a providentially unified understanding of history that does not subscribe to the limits imposed by modern historiography. This providential understanding of history resonates with contemporary Thomistic Christology, which shares Paul’s view that “nothing – that is to say, no human, no spiritual power, no geographical space, no era of time, and not even death – ultimately stands outside the reach of God’s sovereign control.”Footnote 9

After an introductory chapter that appreciatively sketches the contemporary ecumenical resurgence of Thomistic Christology, each of the five main chapters takes up one typological motif (the eschatological New Adam, New Isaac, New Moses, New Joshua, and New David), exploring its role in the New Testament and in the Church Fathers and addressing how Aquinas employs it. Each chapter also identifies places in the tertia pars of the Summa theologiae where further integration of the typological motif might strengthen contemporary Thomistic Christology. Each chapter has a concluding section titled “An Ontological Note,” in which I supplement the chapters’ typological–eschatological emphasis by briefly examining Aquinas’s insights into the ontological realities expressed respectively by the phrases “New Adam” (Christ’s human perfection under grace), “New Isaac” (atonement), “New Moses” (law and grace), “New Joshua” (the state of glory), and “New David” (the mystical body and Christ’s Headship of grace).Footnote 10

In proposing to “reconfigure” Thomistic Christology by integrating these typologies more fully, I am concurring with the judgment of Romanus Cessario and Cajetan Cuddy that Thomistic theologians should “receive the essential philosophical and theological principles from the Angelic Doctor and then apply these sound principles to the unique questions, challenges, and requirements that their own period raises.”Footnote 11 As noted, I am responding especially to modern New Testament scholars’ questions, challenges, and insights about Jesus’ eschatological understanding of his identity and mission. For contemporary New Testament scholars, one of the clearest elements of the New Testament is “that Jesus was remembered as preaching about the kingdom of God and that this was central to his message and mission.”Footnote 12 Biblical scholars also affirm that “Jesus’ talk of the kingdom was blended with the much older imagery of inheriting the land of promise,” that is, imagery related to the exodus.Footnote 13 Jesus’ eschatological renewal of the Temple and the end of the exile are other frequent themes.Footnote 14

For the purpose of developing these eschatological dimensions of Jesus’ identity and mission from within Thomistic Christology, I argue that the above-named five biblical typologies, well known to Aquinas, can serve as a bridge for joining Aquinas’s Christology to modern biblical scholarship’s emphasis on Jesus as the eschatological Davidic king who restores his people, renews the Temple, and leads the new exodus. Contemporary Thomists have perceived how profoundly Aquinas integrates Scripture and the Church Fathers into his theology, but Thomistic Christology still needs to assimilate more explicitly the eschatological aspects that shape the New Testament’s portraits of Jesus.Footnote 15 Therefore, my chapters propose enrichments to Thomistic Christology flowing from explicit attention to the typologies, and I show how such enrichments can be set forth in relation to the tertia pars.

Lest there be any misunderstanding, let me firmly reject the all-too-common idea that Thomistic Christology is overly philosophical. In fact, the metaphysical richness of Aquinas’s Christology and of contemporary Thomistic Christology is greatly needed for any serious reflection on who Jesus is, what he accomplished, and what he continues to accomplish today. In Chapter 1, I survey a number of contemporary Catholic and Protestant thinkers who have reflected deeply upon Aquinas’s Christology and who have retrieved its metaphysical and theological relevance. I single out recent books by Adonis Vidu and Thomas Joseph White, while describing the work of many other important contributors as well, such as Jean-Pierre Torrell and Dominic Legge. It is noteworthy that scholars with deep Eastern sympathies such as Rowan Williams, and Eastern Catholics such as Khaled Anatolios, have also recently drawn upon Aquinas’s Christology in fruitful ways. My first chapter makes clear that the purpose of my book is not to undermine contemporary Thomistic Christology but to augment it. Recognition of Jesus’ humanity, which Paul Gondreau and others have shown is so central to Aquinas’s Christology,Footnote 16 requires today a focused attention on the way his teaching comports with the eschatological dimensions of New Testament Christology.

I propose augmenting Thomistic Christology along typological lines because Aquinas himself employed these typologies and because they have a strikingly eschatological import. Of course, given the biblical and patristic testimony, all theologians – not only Thomists – should have a strong interest in exploring Jesus Christ as the eschatological New Adam, New Isaac, New Moses, New Joshua, and New David. As Joseph Ratzinger says of one of these types, along lines that can be extended to the other four: “[I]t is important to emphasize that Jesus adopts the tradition of Sinai and thus presents himself as the new Moses.”Footnote 17

Biblical Scholarship and Typology

Before proceeding, let me offer some further background to my proposal. One of the most influential New Testament scholars of the past fifty years, E. P. Sanders, reconstructs Jesus’ self-understanding as follows: “Through him, Jesus held, God was acting directly and immediately, bypassing the agreed, biblically sanctioned ordinances, reaching out to the lost sheep of the house of Israel with no more mediation than the words and deeds of one man – himself.”Footnote 18 For Sanders, Jesus understood himself to have “full authority to speak and act on behalf of God,” and Jesus experienced his relationship to God to be uniquely intimate.Footnote 19

Sanders’s remarks are only partly correct, in my view. He is correct about Jesus’ authority and intimacy with the Father. But it is not the case (as Sanders elsewhere helps to showFootnote 20) that Jesus simply “bypassed” Torah and Temple or that Jesus reached out to his people in a way that bypassed the mediation of Israel’s Scriptures. On the contrary, Jesus fulfilled, rather than bypassed, Israel’s covenantal law and cult.Footnote 21 Jesus’ words and deeds are unintelligible without the mediation of Israel’s Scriptures. This can be seen throughout the New Testament, not least in Paul’s devotion to Jesus. As Robin Scroggs remarks, “Paul believes that the eschatological age has been inaugurated by a man who embodies God’s intent for all men – an intent thwarted by the first Adam, fulfilled by the Last.”Footnote 22 Scroggs calls this belief Paul’s “Adamic Christology.”

From the Church Fathers onward – most certainly including Aquinas – Christians have upheld this Adamic Christology. Moreover, Adam is not the only figure from Israel’s Scriptures who helped Jesus and the apostles to illuminate the meaning of Jesus’ words and deeds. King David has a central role as well, since Jesus is repeatedly described as the Messianic king in the line of David. So do Melchizedek, Abraham, Isaac, Moses, Joshua, and Solomon.Footnote 23

But should these Old Testament figures matter to Christology today? In Sanders’s view as a historian, they should not. No doubt Jesus thought of himself as uniquely God’s “viceroy,” helping to inaugurate the imminent kingdom of God,Footnote 24 but for Sanders there is no need to describe Jesus as a New David or New Adam. Sanders offers an illustration of what is wrong with such typological Christology. He states that according to the Bible, “God called Abraham in 1921 BC, Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt around 1500 BC, and David flourished about 1030 BC…. An approximate parallel today to the gospel’s treatment of Jesus would be to describe Elizabeth II by saying that she is heir to the throne of William the Conqueror, that she fulfills the promise of King Arthur.”Footnote 25 When the New Testament authors affirmed that Jesus fulfilled the work of Moses and David, they reflected a commonplace manner of thinking in Second Temple Judaism, but for Sanders this cannot be taken seriously today. In Matthew 16:14, for example, the people imagine that Jesus might be the return of Elijah or Jeremiah!

Sanders represents a standard historical viewpoint when he dismisses as mere invention Matthew’s references to Jesus as the New Moses or Luke’s references to Jesus as the New David. Yet, Sanders considers that a significant amount of truth about Jesus can still be discerned in the Gospels, notwithstanding all the typology. He states, “Echoes of Jewish scripture are everywhere in the gospels, but nevertheless no one would ever mistake the Jesus of the gospels for either Moses or David…. [T]he gospels claim a connection between Jesus and David, but they do not present Jesus as being in the least like David.”Footnote 26 Surely Sanders is correct that Jesus did not do a lot of the things done by Moses and David, both of whom killed other people, for example. In fact, Sanders recognizes that the evangelists “thought that Jesus had gone beyond Moses and was a different sort of king from David. Thus we do not get a cardboard pop-up depiction of Jesus as a new Moses or David.”Footnote 27 But Sanders still thinks that the historical Jesus must be separated from the typological overlay by which the evangelists sought “to convince readers that Jesus fulfilled God’s promises to Israel” and that Jesus is the “universal saviour who fits into Jewish salvation history.”Footnote 28 According to Sanders, the historian must do the “patient spadework to dig through the layers of Christian devotion and to recover the historical core.”Footnote 29

However, Sanders’s approach has an evident weak spot. Namely, assuming that God exists and is the provident Creator – assumptions that are quite reasonableFootnote 30 – why could not the incarnate Lord actually be in a real and fully historical way the New Adam (inaugurating a new creation), the New Isaac (fulfilling the sacrificial cult of the Temple), the New Moses (teaching God’s law, mediating between God and his people, and establishing the new covenantFootnote 31), the New Joshua (leading God’s people across the Jordan of death to the fullness of the Promised Land), and the New David (inaugurating the kingdom of God)? For Sanders, this may be all very well as theology, but the historian cannot pay attention to it. The historian must “distinguish one kind of truth from another, and … study only the second, mundane kind,” namely, the “bit of ordinary history within the grand framework of salvation history.”Footnote 32

What if, however, the ordinary history at issue actually is “salvation” history? Sanders assumes that the “ordinary history” of Jesus of Nazareth is obscured by the salvation-historical typologies. But what makes this assumption true, unless one deems a priori that Jesus is not the incarnate Lord or that history has no providential unity? While affirming the possibility of “Jesus’ own conscious imitation of scriptural types,” Sanders holds that such imitation did not express an underlying truth about Jesus.Footnote 33

This is a common viewpoint among scholars today, many of whom find Scripture’s typologies to be implausible, arbitrary, and historically anachronistic. I grant that some of the Old and New Testament’s typological links may well be arbitrary, just as there are instances of patristic and medieval typological or allegorical exegesis that are implausible.Footnote 34 But I think the five Christological types presented here, which are not invented by the Church Fathers but are found in the New Testament’s literal sense, can be demonstrated to be reasonable entailments of Jesus’ status as the eschatological Messiah. In my view, Christians should affirm these typological portraits to be historically true about Jesus, rather than mere metaphors.Footnote 35

Put simply, Jesus really is the eschatological (and therefore “New”) Adam, Isaac, Moses, Joshua, and David. To call him the Messianic Son of David or the Last Adam is not a mere metaphor. This entails that from the beginning, in God’s plan, Jesus is the one to whom the earlier figures inchoately pointed, since “it is a law of Biblical exegesis that the types in Scripture derive … their meaning and value from the anti-types to which they refer. Adam is therefore entirely subordinated to Christ.”Footnote 36

In critical dialogue with Sanders, N. T. Wright has argued that the New Testament’s worldview in this regard should be taken much more seriously by contemporary historians – and by contemporary theologians. The New Testament authors would not be surprised to find that their faith-filled understanding of Jesus as fulfilling God’s covenants with Israel in the midst of history is difficult to accept for modern secular historians. But Wright argues that to understand the historical Jesus requires understanding how in Jesus “the symbols and stories of Israel had been fulfilled in a shocking and decisive manner.”Footnote 37 This at least was the claim made by the New Testament authors, by the first Christians, and in various ways by Jesus himself. When one reads the New Testament, one perceives that its authors continually show us the truth about Jesus typologically, in light of the central figures of Israel’s Scriptures, beginning with Adam. The authors of the New Testament understood these figures to be part of “the saga of God’s election, judgment, and redemption of a people through time,” and they understood Jesus to have recapitulated and perfected the missions of these figures through his eschatological fulfillment of God’s covenants with Israel.Footnote 38

Thus, Wright maintains that underlying the Gospel narratives about Jesus’ life, death, and Resurrection, we see in a fulfilled and transformed way “the narratives of Israel’s vocation: Abraham’s call and covenant, Moses’ Exodus and Tabernacle, David’s and Solomon’s victories and Temple.”Footnote 39 For his part, the biblical theologian Thomas Schreiner takes us back to Adam: “Jesus is the true Adam, who exercises the rule that Adam was supposed to carry out.”Footnote 40 Jesus thereby overcomes the consequences of human sin and death.Footnote 41 Brant Pitre emphasizes the theme of the new exodus in the Gospel narratives. He contends that Jesus “identified himself as the eschatological Moses, whose prophetic signs would not only signify the new exodus spoken of by the prophets, but actually set it in motion.”Footnote 42 Joshua Jipp directs us toward Jesus as the eschatological David, known through “royal honorific[s] such as Christ, Son of David, Branch, the Lion of Judah, shepherd, King, and so on.”Footnote 43 These typological Christologies are the means by which the New Testament authors communicate eschatological truths about Jesus. Francis Watson nicely sums up the point: “Old Testament conceptuality establishes the preconditions for the intelligibility of Jesus’ person and work.”Footnote 44

In his masterwork Echoes of Scripture in the Gospels, Hays addresses the challenge mounted by scholars such as Sanders. Hays remarks that historical-critical scholarship “characteristically judges that the New Testament’s Christological readings of Israel’s Scripture are simply a big mistake.”Footnote 45 Influenced by Hays, I offer three observations in response. First, these central figures of Israel’s Scriptures shed light upon Jesus’ words and deeds.Footnote 46 Did Jesus say or do anything that suggests a parallel with Adam? Yes, he inaugurated Israel’s restoration and thereby stands at the center of a renewed creation. Did Jesus say or do anything that suggests a parallel with Isaac? Yes, he made clear that he was to shed his blood, in obedience, as the Father’s beloved Son, thereby enacting the perfect sacrificial offering. Did Jesus say or do anything that suggests a link with Moses? Yes, he taught with unique authority, correcting Torah when needed; and he symbolically presented his ministry as a new exodus, in which his twelve disciples represent the twelve tribes of the people of God. Did Jesus say or do anything that suggests a link with Joshua? Yes, in accord with his baptism in the Jordan and through his death and Resurrection, he crossed over into the fullness of the Promised Land at the head of the people of God.Footnote 47 Did Jesus say or do anything that lays claim to Davidic royal authority? Yes, he preached the kingdom of God and did so as the one whose work is central to its inauguration.

Second, our contemporaries are unlikely to be able to make sense of Jesus as the Christ unless we retrieve the role of these typologies in illuminating his eschatological work. As Christopher Seitz says, “The challenge of our day is how to see in Jesus’ death and raising actions truly in accordance with the Scriptures of Israel. For that, we shall need to return to typological and figural senses.”Footnote 48 If we Christians are going to teach about the real Jesus Christ, who brings God’s plan to eschatological fulfillment, we must use the two-Testament Bible to underscore that Jesus taught and did things that enable us to recognize him as of universal relevance (the New Adam), as possessing definitive royal authority in establishing justice (the New David), as accomplishing the perfect offering in self-sacrificial love (the New Isaac), as teaching the authoritative law of love and enacting the new covenant (the New Moses), and as leading human beings into the true Promised Land (the New Joshua). If much of the Old Testament “is simply bewildering to modern Christians,” as Leroy Huizenga remarks,Footnote 49 then this requires a Christology that unlocks the whole of Israel’s Scriptures and covenantal life.

Third, Christianity stands or falls upon the existence and providence of God. Indeed, these two realities are the main point of much of Israel’s Scriptures, so much so that the Letter to the Hebrews maintains in its chapter on the scriptural heroes of faith that “whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him” (Heb 11:6). The covenantal God enters into a relationship with his people in order to show them who he is (and, of course, that he is) and in order to show them that he cares for them and is trustworthy, despite their sufferings. The providential convergence of the two-Testament scriptural witness in the figure of Jesus Christ is what would be expected if Jesus is the incarnate Lord. No wonder Seitz remarks, “The crisis in [biblical] hermeneutics is in reality a crisis involving God’s providence.”Footnote 50 One way that God shows his fidelity consists in his shaping of Israel’s history and Scriptures to illuminate the person and work of Jesus.Footnote 51

Thomism, Ressourcement, and Typology

As noted above, although Aquinas does not fully exploit the Christological typologies in the tertia pars of the Summa theologiae – although even if he does observe that Christ’s death on a Cross fulfills “very many figures” found in Israel’s ScripturesFootnote 52 – the typologies appear more centrally in Aquinas’s biblical commentaries. Moreover, Aquinas treats Christ as the New Melchizedek in the tertia pars’s question on Christ’s priesthood. Thus, the fact that Aquinas’s theology is scientific, in an Aristotelian sense (while also employing reasons of fittingnessFootnote 53), does not prevent Aquinas from decisively employing Christological typology within his sacra doctrina.

Aquinas states that “all the senses are founded on one – the literal – from which alone can any argument be drawn, and not from those intended in allegory.”Footnote 54 It may seem that the New Testament typologies are the spiritual sense (specifically, the allegorical sense), and for Aquinas “nothing necessary to faith is contained under the spiritual sense which is not elsewhere put forward by the Scripture in its literal sense.”Footnote 55 But in fact Aquinas makes clear that “the literal sense is what is first intended by the words whether properly speaking or figuratively.”Footnote 56 Given this definition, the typologies that are most notable for Christology belong to the New Testament’s literal sense. According to the literal sense of various New Testament texts, Jesus is the New Adam, New Isaac, New Moses, New Joshua, and New David. Although he transcends these Old Testament personages, they are “types” of him and he eschatologically recapitulates and fulfills their missions.

In the patristic and medieval eras, as Hans Boersma says, “Christian readers were convinced of the providential guidance of God throughout history. So they would be more likely to regard similarities between various events reflected in different [scriptural] passages as the result of God’s faithful character rather than as mere historical coincidence.”Footnote 57 We should do the same in our reading of Scripture. Even more pointedly, Ephraim Radner advises: “If … the Word is indeed the living hand that shapes events, then we should rightly seek the meaning of such events in their figural identity.”Footnote 58 We should not expect to be able to understand Jesus as the Christ outside of his figural identity. For example, if Jesus were not the New David, he could not have brought Israel’s covenants to eschatological fulfillment. Indeed, as Matthew Barrett says, “Jesus’ own Christological reading of the Old Testament, one imitated by his disciples,” is typologically structured.Footnote 59

In the mid-twentieth century, Ressourcement theologians and neoscholastic theologians argued about what place to give to biblical typologies and the spiritual senses. While otherwise being close collaborators in the retrieval of typological awareness, the Jesuits Jean Daniélou and Henri de Lubac sharply disagreed with each other about whether typology can or should be distinguished from allegory (Daniélou thought so, de Lubac thought not).Footnote 60 Among the views condemned in Pope Pius XII’s 1950 encyclical Humani Generis is the view that “the literal sense of Holy Scripture and its explanation, carefully worked out under the Church’s vigilance by so many great exegetes, should yield now to a new exegesis, which they are pleased to call symbolic or spiritual.”Footnote 61 Some neoscholastics feared that if biblical history were interpreted typologically in a vigorous manner, then the defense of the historicity of the biblical narratives could be imperiled. With regard to Christology, this reasonable fear should lead us to recognize the need for a defense of the historicity of the New Testament’s witness to Jesus,Footnote 62 but there is no need to play down the typologies woven into the fabric of the New Testament.

In an earlier book, Participatory Biblical Exegesis, I argued in favor of a typologically rich understanding of “history,” and thus of the literal sense, due to history’s participation in divine providence.Footnote 63 I was indebted to Francis Martin, who remarks that “the persons of Israel share proleptically but metaphysically in the reality of Christ,” and so “the relation between Jesus and Moses or David is analogical and not merely intertextual.”Footnote 64 Although my arguments in Participatory Biblical Exegesis fit with Ressourcement theology, I advanced the arguments on Thomistic grounds. Despite significant philosophical differences (where the neoscholastics were largely in the right) and despite significant differences in historical erudition (where the Ressourcement theologians had the upper hand), these two movements of twentieth-century theology should complement each other.

My approach in the present book brings together neoscholastic or Thomistic insights with Ressourcement insights into figural Christology. My approach may also help to further unite Protestant and Catholic Thomistic Christologies, by highlighting biblical theology in a manner congruent with Reformed theologians’ emphasis on Scripture, while doing so in a way befitting Catholic (and Orthodox) emphasis on the importance of patristic exegesis. Overall, I strive to contribute to what Piotr Roszak and Jörgen Vijgen have called “Biblical Thomism” – defined not as something other than “Thomism” but as an effort “to understand and employ the praxis of sacra doctrina, as exemplified primarily by Thomas Aquinas” in light of “the pivotal role of Scripture in such a speculative engagement with Revelation.”Footnote 65 In his own recent contribution to Biblical Thomism, Serge-Thomas Bonino has highlighted Aquinas’s practice of a “conversio ad Scripturas” by which “the theologian returns to the Bible, on one hand to verify the conformity of his theology to the permanent standard that is the Word of God, and on the other hand to deepen the understanding of the Scriptures by means of perspectives opened up by theological contemplation.”Footnote 66 This is the standpoint from which my “reconfiguring” of Thomistic Christology in an eschatological key will proceed.

Conclusion

Hays has encouraged contemporary theologians and biblical scholars to appreciate “the revisionary figural ways that the four Gospel writers actually read Israel’s Scripture.”Footnote 67 Similarly, Jeffrey Pulse calls upon the Christian Bible’s readers “to identify the various biblical motifs that weave their way through the entirety of the biblical narrative…. These motifs show the unity of the narrative as they connect all Scripture – Genesis to Revelation – into one story.”Footnote 68 The Gospels’ figural reading practices have dogmatic significance, insofar as they shed light on Jesus’ Incarnation, teaching, Cross, and Resurrection. Just as typologies are important for Scripture’s presentation of the mysteries of Christ, so also can they contribute much to Thomistic Christology.

On this basis, my book sketches a typological path for Thomistic integration of contemporary eschatological portraits of Jesus’ person and work. Thomists can agree with Dale Allison’s claim that “Jesus was an apocalyptic prophet.”Footnote 69 Jesus understood himself to be proclaiming and inaugurating the eschatological kingdom, healing the fallen creation and restoring his people. Allison notes that “the major theme of Jesus’ preaching was the kingdom of God” and that “Jesus himself is, in the canonical Gospels, the eschatological king, or destined to be such.”Footnote 70

As noted above, Aquinas affirms that Jesus is the Messianic king who has inaugurated the eschatological kingdom of God, even if Aquinas does not give this point an explicit place in the tertia pars. As we will see, explicit reflection on Jesus as the New David would be helpful for contemporary Thomistic Christology (Chapter 6).

Pitre has shown that Jesus placed the new exodus at the very center of his worldview. Commenting upon the symbolism of the Last Supper, Pitre reconstructs its likely rationale: “Just as the first exodus was set in motion by the Passover sacrifice, so too the new exodus, which will usher in the kingdom, is set in motion by a new Passover – an eschatological Passover – that is accomplished by means of his own suffering, death, and restoration to life ‘in the kingdom.’”Footnote 71 The new exodus theme receives a prominent place in the New Testament, and it sheds light upon many of the central aspects of Jesus’ words and deeds. Attention to Jesus as the New Moses (Chapter 4) and New Joshua (Chapter 5) can enrich contemporary Thomistic Christology’s reflections on various aspects of the new exodus, such as Christ’s teaching and covenantal enactment (New Moses) and Christ’s baptism and Ascension (New Joshua).

Jesus in the Gospels strongly associates himself with the Temple. Anthony Le Donne has argued that the title “Son of David,” in the Gospels, “was both Davidic and Solomonic,” and he finds that “the charting of memory refraction will show how early memories of Jesus were initially shaped by typological interpretation.”Footnote 72 Le Donne suggests that Mark 11 and Matthew 21 – Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem and his cleansing of the Temple – should be read in light of Solomon the Son of David and Temple builder.Footnote 73 Michael Patrick Barber has provided further arguments along similar lines.Footnote 74 For contemporary Thomistic Christology, Christ as the New Isaac (Chapter 3) – the perfect cultic sacrifice – offers a path for engaging Christ’s relation to the Temple.

Among the more pressing theological issues today are whether Christ really is the universal Savior and whether faith (implicit or explicit) in Christ is necessary for salvation. In my view, attention to Christ as the New Adam (Chapter 2) provides a way for contemporary Thomistic Christology to deepen its appreciation of Christ’s Headship and to explain what it means to affirm that Christ is the universal Savior.

Aquinas’s use of the New Melchizedek typology sets the pattern for my chapters. When he addresses Christ’s priesthood in the tertia pars, he recalls the Letter to the Hebrews’s statement that Jesus was “designated by God a high priest according to the order of Melchizedek” (Heb 5:10). In an insistent and evocative manner, Hebrews discusses Jesus in light of Melchizedek. After showing why Christ did not descend from the Levitical or Aaronic priesthood, Aquinas concludes his quaestio on Christ’s priesthood (III, q. 22) by discussing what it means for Christ to be a New Melchizedek.Footnote 75 His discussion here exemplifies the value of the “reconfiguring” that I hope to encourage in Thomistic Christology today.

In sum, after an opening chapter demonstrating that the present ecumenical renewal of Thomistic Christology offers an exciting prospect, my five constructive chapters will outline a biblical, patristic, and Thomistic typological approach whose consistent purpose is to integrate contemporary Thomistic Christology more fully with the New Testament’s inaugurated eschatology.

Footnotes

1 Thomas Joseph White, O.P., “The Precarity of Wisdom: Modern Dominican Theology, Perspectivalism, and the Tasks of Reconstruction,” in Ressourcement Thomism: Sacred Doctrine, the Sacraments, and the Moral Life. Essays in Honor of Romanus Cessario, O.P., ed. Reinhard Hütter and Matthew Levering), 92–123, at 116–17. Among the questions that White raises is one at the heart of my project: “What is the relation between his [Jesus’s] eschatological message concerning the Kingdom of God and the revelation of his own identiy as the Son of God?” (116). As White emphasizes in his The Incarnate Lord: A Thomistic Study in Christology (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2015), 61, appreciation for historical research into Jesus does not here substitute for the gift of faith by which Jesus is known personally.

2 In the New Testament (and, even more, in the Church Fathers and Aquinas), Jesus eschatologically recapitulates the male figures, while Mary/Church recapitulates the central female figures, beginning with Eve. It could also be argued that Jesus eschatologically recapitulates various female figures in the Old Testament, but this is not the path taken by the New Testament. For discussion of Mary and typology, see Joseph Ratzinger, Daughter Zion: Meditations on the Church’s Marian Belief, trans. John M. McDermott, S.J. (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1983); and Louis Bouyer, The Seat of Wisdom: An Essay on the Place of the Virgin Mary in Christian Theology, trans. A. V. Littledale (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1960).

3 Irenaeus, “Against Heresies,” Book IV, chapter 26, in The Apostolic Fathers, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, vol. 1 of Ante-Nicene Fathers Series (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995), 315–567, at 496.

4 Matthew W. Bates, The Hermeneutics of the Apostolic Proclamation: The Center of Paul’s Method of Scriptural Interpretation (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2012), 121.

5 The New Testament does not name Jesus as the “New Adam” – Paul employs “last Adam” or “second” Adam in 1 Corinthians 15. Nor does the New Testament speak of the “New” Isaac, Moses, Joshua, or David. In this book, however, I will employ these phrases in order to signify the eschatological recapitulation of these figures by Jesus. On the Christian meaning of “Old” and “New” when applied to the two Testaments, see R. W. L. Moberly, The Old Testament of the Old Testament: Patriarchal Narratives and Mosaic Yahwism (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress, 1992), 158–59.

6 See Richard B. Hays, Reading Backwards: Figural Christology and the Fourfold Gospel Witness (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2014).

7 Gerhard Lohfink, The Forty Parables of Jesus, trans. Linda M. Maloney (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press Academic, 2021), 223.

8 John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, vol. 1, The Roots of the Problem and the Person (New York: Doubleday, 1991), 198–99.

9 Bates, The Hermeneutics of the Apostolic Proclamation, 122.

10 Here may be the place to recall the medieval practice of exegeting Scripture according to the four causes, so as to penetrate to the ontological realities under discussion in scriptural texts. For background, focusing on the relation of divine and human authorship, see Timothy Bellamah, O.P., “Tunc scimus cum causas cognoscimus: Some Medieval Endeavors to Know Scripture in Its Causes,” in Theology Needs Philosophy: Acting against Reason Is Contrary to Human Nature, ed. Matthew L. Lamb (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2016), 154–72.

11 Romanus Cessario, O.P., and Cajetan Cuddy, O.P., Thomas and the Thomists: The Achievement of Thomas Aquinas and His Interpreters (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 2017), xii, xvii.

12 James D. G. Dunn, Jesus Remembered (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2003), 387.

13 Dunn, Jesus Remembered, 386. For the influence of the exodus upon New Testament writings and thought-patterns (as distinct from claims about the historical Jesus’ own worldview), see for example Teresa Morgan, Roman Faith and Christian Faith: Pistis and Fides in the Early Roman Empire and Early Churches (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015), 504–05.

14 For background to the theme of the eschatological end of exile, see Judith H. Newman, Before the Bible: The Liturgical Body and the Formation of Scriptures in Early Judaism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 95. This theme has been a central element in N. T. Wright’s work, as spelled out especially in Wright’s programmatic The New Testament and the People of God (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 1992). For further discussion, see Brant Pitre, “Excursus: N. T. Wright and ‘the End of the Exile,’” in Jesus, the Tribulation, and the End of the Exile: Restoration Eschatology and the Origin of the Atonement (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2005), 31–40, where Pitre argues that “while Wright is absolutely right about the importance of the ‘exile,’ he is fundamentally wrong in his understanding of it” – since Second Temple Jews living in the land do not appear to have considered themselves to be in “exile,” but instead they focused on the fact that the Assyrian exile of the northern ten tribes had never been resolved and they awaited “the restoration of all twelve tribes of Israel in a final Return from Exile, under the headship of a messianic king” (32, 38).

15 See, for example, Roger Nutt and Michael Dauphinais, eds., Thomas Aquinas, Biblical Theologian (Steubenville, OH: Emmaus Academic, 2021); Piotr Roszak and Jörgen Vijgen, eds., Reading the Church Fathers with St. Thomas Aquinas: Historical and Systematical Perspectives (Turnhout: Brepols, 2021); Michael Dauphinais, Andrew Hofer, O.P., and Roger W. Nutt, eds., Thomas Aquinas and the Greek Fathers (Ave Maria, FL: Sapientia Press, 2019); Leo J. Elders, S.V.D., Thomas Aquinas and His Predecessors: The Philosophers and the Church Fathers in His Works (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2018); Michael Dauphinais, Barry David, and Matthew Levering, eds. Aquinas the Augustinian (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2007); and Michael Dauphinais and Matthew Levering, eds., Reading John with St. Thomas Aquinas: Theological Exegesis and Speculative Theology (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2004).

16 See Paul Gondreau, “The Humanity of Christ, the Incarnate Word,” in The Theology of Thomas Aquinas, ed. Rik Van Nieuwenhove and Joseph Wawrykow (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2005), 252–76.

17 Ratzinger is here writing as Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI: “The Catholic Priesthood,” in From the Depths of Our Hearts: Priesthood, Celibacy, and the Crisis of the Catholic Church, trans. Michael J. Miller, ed. Nicholas Diat (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2020), 23–60, at 32.

18 E. P. Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus (London: Penguin, 1993), 236–37.

19 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 238.

20 See E. P. Sanders, Jesus and Judaism (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 1985).

21 For discussion of this point, addressing supersessionist and exegetical concerns, see the chapters on “Torah” and “Temple” in my Engaging the Doctrine of Israel: A Christian Israelology in Dialogue with Ongoing Judaism (Eugene, OR: Cascade, 2021).

22 Robin Scroggs, The Last Adam: A Study in Pauline Anthropology (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1966), ix.

23 For the connection of Abraham and Jesus, see Mary Healy, Hebrews (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2016), 241.

24 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 248.

25 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 83.

26 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 89.

27 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 90.

28 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 90.

29 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 280.

30 Against the notion that these assumptions require revealed theology per se, see the arguments in my Proofs of God: Classical Arguments from Tertullian to Barth (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2016).

31 On the new covenant, see, for example, Michael J. Gorman’s observation about Matthew 26:27–28, in Gorman, The Death of the Messiah and the Birth of the New Covenant: A (Not So) New Model of the Atonement (Eugene, OR: Cascade, 2014), 36–37: “[I]n this dominical claim we should probably hear echoes of at least three scriptural texts and themes – the Passover/Exodus, the blood of the covenant (Exod 24:6–8), and the new covenant and its forgiveness (Jer 31:31–34) – plus, in light of Matthew’s ransom text (Matt 20:28 = Mark 10:45), the suffering servant’s death (Isa 53:12)…. This forgiven and forgiving new-covenant community embodies, indeed fulfills, the two tables of the law.” See also Morna D. Hooker, Not Ashamed of the Gospel: New Testament Interpretations of the Death of Christ (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1994), 59, 67.

32 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 91. For the procedures involved, see Ernst Troeltsch’s 1898 essay, “Historical and Dogmatic Method in Theology,” in Religion in History, trans. James Luther Adams and Walter F. Bense (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 1991), 11–33. Against Sanders’s view of history, see especially The New Testament and the People of God, 81–144. See also, from a somewhat different standpoint, Robert Morgan, “Christology through Scriptural Interpretation through New Testament Theology,” in Christology and Scripture: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, ed. Andrew T. Lincoln and Angus Paddison (London: T&T Clark, 2007), 58–83.

33 Sanders, The Historical Figure of Jesus, 85. For Sanders, “The more parallels there were between Jesus and characters or prophecies in Hebrew scripture, the more likely Matthew, Mark and Luke were to invent still more. They may have reasoned that if there were six similarities, there probably had been a seventh. I think that there is no doubt that they did invent some, though the possibility of overlaps, or of Jesus’ own conscious imitation of scriptural types, means that we must often be uncertain” (85). Without engaging the question of the historicity of the typological fulfillment, Anthony Le Donne argues that Sanders should have integrated typology more fully into his portrait of Jesus, since Jesus’ worldview was typologically saturated: see Le Donne, The Historiographical Jesus: Memory, Typology, and the Son of David (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2009), 4–5.

34 For background, see, for example, Lewis Ayres, “‘There’s Fire in That Rain’: On Reading the Letter and Reading Allegorically,” in Heaven on Earth? Theological Interpretation in Ecumenical Dialogue, ed. Hans Boersma and Matthew Levering (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2013), 33–52; and Henri de Lubac, S.J., Medieval Exegesis, vol. 1, The Four Senses of Scripture, trans. Mark Sebanc (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1998).

35 See Gilbert Dahan, “Thomas Aquinas: Exegesis and Hermeneutics,” in Reading Sacred Scripture with Thomas Aquinas: Hermeneutical Tools, Theological Questions and New Perspectives, ed. Piotr Roszak and Jörgen Vijgen (Turnhout: Brepols, 2015), 45–70. Dahan notes that in studying Aquinas’s biblical interpretation, it is useful to “distinguish between the historical books of the Old Testament, entailing a literal reading and an allegorical (figurative) reading; the prophetic books, principally entailing a literal reading (in a Christological sense); and the New Testament, entailing a literal reading and a spiritual (somewhat tropological) reading” (54). If one is reading the New Testament texts that portray Jesus as the eschatological Adam (or Isaac, Moses, Joshua, David), then this is the literal sense – and it is no mere metaphor, since Jesus eschatologically recapitulates these personages. Note that Jesus does not eschatologically recapitulate everything in the lives of these Old Testament personages but only the parts that befit his saving work, allowing for his radical newness. See also Timothy Bellamah’s observation that Theodore of Mopsuestia, who held that only five Psalms literally refer to Jesus Christ, was condemned by Constantinople II in 553, “with the result that Aquinas considered the prophetic literal sense a matter of doctrine and the denial of it a matter of heresy” (Bellamah, “Tunc scimus cum causas cognoscimus,” 168). Summarizing the import of Summa theologiae I, q. 1, a. 10, Bellamah adds that for Aquinas “the literal sense is the one intended by the author, and … the author of Scripture is God…. [A]ny text of Scripture may convey several senses, because such signification lies within the capacity of its divine author, namely, God,” and also because the human author can speak prophetically (and literally) about future realities (Bellamah, “Tunc scimus cum causas cognoscimus,” 169).

36 Thomas Merton, The New Man (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1961), 132. I have excised one word (marked by “…”): “all.”

37 N. T. Wright, History and Eschatology: Jesus and the Promise of Natural Theology (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2019), 197. See also Francis Watson’s observation, spelling out the consequences of Gerhard von Rad’s approach: “The ‘Old Testament’, as Christian scripture, only comes into existence in the moment of absolute newness represented by Jesus, and should be interpreted on the basis of its moment of origin; only the antitype makes the types visible as such” (Watson, Text and Truth: Redefining Biblical Theology [Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1997], 207; cf. 212–19 for criticism of Brevard Childs’s effort to preserve a “relatively independent status” for the Old Testament within the Christian Bible).

38 Richard B. Hays, The Conversion of the Imagination: Paul as Interpreter of Israel’s Scripture (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2005), xvi. Hays specifies what he means by inaugurated eschatology: Paul “identifies the church as standing precisely at the temporal juncture in which the old age has lost its claim upon us but the new age is present only proleptically…. The story is not over yet, and the church should imagine itself to be, analogously to Israel in the wilderness, a pilgrim people that has not yet arrived at its promised destination” (188).

39 Wright, History and Eschatology, 237.

40 Thomas S. Schreiner, The King in His Beauty: A Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 438.

41 For background, see Jeffrey S. Siker, Sin in the New Testament (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020). As Siker observes, the New Testament presents “sin as the fundamental human dilemma from which we need to be saved by God. The mechanism for such salvation within Christian tradition is always linked to the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus … [T]he death of Jesus was the primary focus for how the early Christians came to understand God’s extension of forgiveness of sins, as well as the defeat of the power of sin and sin’s consequence, death” (172–73).

42 Brant Pitre, Jesus and the Last Supper (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2015), 514.

43 Joshua W. Jipp, The Messianic Theology of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2020), 16.

44 Watson, Text and Truth, 218. Watson adds that this point does not mean that Jesus “can be adequately ‘explained’ on this basis,” along lines that would reduce him to a mere extension of Old Testament figures (218).

45 Richard B. Hays, Echoes of Scripture in the Gospels (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2016), 3.

46 My point in this paragraph is not to claim that Jesus consciously thought of himself, so far as historical criticism can discern, as the New Adam or the New Isaac (and so on). Instead, I maintain that Jesus said and did things that make comprehensible (and justifiable) these typological connections as found in the New Testament.

47 For relevant background, see Pitre, Jesus and the Last Supper, 166–67, 188.

48 Christopher R. Seitz, Figured Out: Typology and Providence in Christian Scripture (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 2001), 47. See also the contention of Aidan Nichols, O.P.: “The fundamental promise-fulfillment format of the Bible is why the kind of exegesis we call ‘typological’ is the sort that best befits its unique genius” (Nichols, Lovely, Like Jerusalem: The Fulfillment of the Old Testament in Christ and the Church [San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2007], 167).

49 Leroy A. Huizenga, Loosing the Lion: Proclaiming the Gospel of Mark (Steubenville, OH: Emmaus Road, 2017), 19.

50 Huizenga, Loosing the Lion, 33.

51 See also, from a different angle than the one pursued here, Gregory R. Lanier’s study of Luke’s application to Jesus of various metaphors that are “significant OT/Jewish ways of conceptualizing the identity of God” (Lanier, Old Testament Conceptual Metaphors and the Christology of Luke’s Gospel [London: T&T Clark, 2018], 222).

52 Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologiae, trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province (Westminster, MD: Christian Classics, 1981), III, q. 46, a. 4.

53 See Aidan Nichols, O.P., “St. Thomas Aquinas on the Passion of Christ: A Reading of Summa Theologiae IIIa, q. 46,” Scottish Journal of Theology 43 (1990): 447–59.

54 Aquinas, Summa theologiae I, q. 1, a. 10, ad 1.

55 I, q. 1, a. 10, ad 1. Franklin T. Harkins states, “Following the most common medieval classification, Aquinas divides the spiritual sense into the allegorical, the moral or tropological, and the anagogical. The allegorical sense is that according to which ‘the things of the Old Law signify the things of the New Law’ (I.1.10 co.). For Aquinas, as for premodern exegetes generally, Christological interpretations of the Old Testament fall within the ambit of the allegorical” (Harkins, Thomas Aquinas: The Basics [London: Routledge, 2021], 35).

56 Thomas Aquinas, Commentary on the Book of Job, trans. Brian Thomas Becket Mullady, O.P., ed. The Aquinas Institute (Lander, WY: The Aquinas Institute for the Study of Sacred Doctrine, 2016), ch. 1, lect. 2, p. 14.

57 Hans Boersma, Sacramental Preaching: Sermons on the Hidden Presence of Christ (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2016), 51.

58 Ephraim Radner, Time and the Word: Figural Reading of the Christian Scriptures (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2016), 8.

59 Matthew Barrett, Canon, Covenant and Christology: Rethinking Jesus and the Scriptures of Israel (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2020), 37.

60 See Jean Daniélou, S.J., The Lord of History: Reflections on the Inner Meaning of History, trans. Nigel Abercrombie (Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1958); and Henri de Lubac, S.J., “‘Typologie’ et allégorisme,” Recherches de science religieuse 34 (1947): 180–226.

62 See, for example, Brant Pitre, The Case for Jesus: The Biblical and Historical Evidence for Christ (New York: Image, 2016). See also my Did Jesus Rise from the Dead? Historical and Theological Reflections (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019).

63 See my Participatory Biblical Exegesis: A Theology of Biblical Interpretation (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2008). See also, more recently, T. Adam Van Wart, “Aquinas’s Eschatological Historiography: Job, Providence, and the Multiple Senses of the Historical Event,” Pro Ecclesia 30 (2021): 32–50.

64 Francis Martin, Sacred Scripture: The Disclosure of the Word (Naples, FL: Sapientia Press, 2006), 274. See also Jeremy Holmes, “Participation and the Meaning of Scripture,” in Reading Sacred Scripture with Thomas Aquinas, 91–113. I think that such typologies need not be grounded in a historical referent although they may well be. Even if no “historical Isaac” existed, God could have providentially governed the development of the text of Genesis to ensure a typological preparation for Jesus the New Isaac.

65 Piotr Roszak and Jörgen Vijgen, “Introduction,” in Towards a Biblical Thomism: Thomas Aquinas and the Renewal of Biblical Theology, ed. Piotr Roszak and Jörgen Vijgen (Pamplona: EUNSA, 2018), 11–20, at 14. The present book can be seen as a companion to my earlier work of constructive Thomistic Christology, Christ’s Fulfillment of Torah and Temple: Salvation according to Thomas Aquinas (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2002).

66 Serge-Thomas Bonino, O.P., Saint Thomas d’Aquin, lecteur du Cantique des Cantiques (Paris: Cerf, 2019), 137. I employ here the translation of Bonino’s book done by Andrew Levering, forthcoming as Reading the Song of Songs with St. Thomas Aquinas (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press). See also Stéphane Loiseau, De l’écoute à la parole. La lecture biblique dans la doctrine sacrée selon Thomas d’Aquin (Paris: Cerf, 2017).

67 Hays, Echoes of Scripture in the Gospels, 4.

68 Jeffrey Pulse, Figuring Resurrection: Joseph as a Death and Resurrection Figure in the Old Testament and Second Temple Judaism (Bellingham, WA: Lexham, 2021), 278.

69 Dale C. Allison, Jr., Constructing Jesus: Memory, Imagination, and History (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2010), 31.

70 Allison, Constructing Jesus, 244–45. For Allison, it is likely that Jesus thought of the full arrival of the kingdom as far more imminent than has actually turned out to be the case, and Allison does not give particular credence, as a historian, to Jesus being God incarnate.

71 Pitre, Jesus and the Last Supper, 511.

72 Le Donne, The Historiographical Jesus, 94.

73 Jiří Dvořáček emphasizes Solomon’s role in Jewish tradition as a healer and exorcist. With significant textual evidence, he argues that “when Matthew’s Jesus in Matt 12,42 says ‘Something greater than Solomon is here,’ he alludes not only to his own person and teaching but also to his miraculous deeds, namely to his healings and exorcisms, which are deeds of wisdom (cf. Matt 11,2; 11,19) and which surpass even the healings and exorcisms of Solomon (9,33; 12,42)” (Dvořáček, The Son of David in Matthew’s Gospel in the Light of the Solomon as Exorcist Tradition [Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2016], 205).

74 Michael Patrick Barber, “Jesus as the Davidic Temple Builder and Peter’s Priestly Role in Matthew 16:16–19,” Journal of Biblical Literature 132 (2013): 935–53. For the argument that Jesus understood David and Solomon along priestly lines – and understood himself as the “Son of David” in this sense – see Nicholas Perrin, Jesus the Priest (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2018), 152–65.

75 Fred L. Horton, Jr., provides some background from the Church Fathers: “In searching the fathers, Jerome found that, except for Origen, those who dealt with Melchizedek all considered him to be a man, a Canaanite, and the king of Jerusalem. In general the function of Melchizedek for the church fathers was that of a priest of the uncircumcision, a priesthood carried on through Christ …. The great majority of writings about Melchizedek in the early church stem from writers opposing heretics who make of Melchizedek a heavenly being” (Horton, The Melchizedek Tradition: A Critical Examination of the Sources to the Fifth Century A.D. and in the Epistle to the Hebrews [Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976], 88–89). Horton argues that Hebrews does not consider Melchizedek to be a heavenly being. Susan R. Garrett deems it likely that the authors of Genesis 14:18–19 and Psalm 110:4 thought Melchizedek to be an angel: see Garrett, No Ordinary Angel: Celestial Spirits and Christian Claims about Jesus (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008), 67. Garrett adds, “Jesus is never called an angel in the New Testament, and indeed he is distinguished from them in quite important ways” (Garrett, No Ordinary Angel, 238).

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  • Introduction
  • Matthew Levering, University of St Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary, Illinois
  • Book: Reconfiguring Thomistic Christology
  • Online publication: 24 May 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009221504.001
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  • Introduction
  • Matthew Levering, University of St Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary, Illinois
  • Book: Reconfiguring Thomistic Christology
  • Online publication: 24 May 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009221504.001
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  • Introduction
  • Matthew Levering, University of St Mary of the Lake, Mundelein Seminary, Illinois
  • Book: Reconfiguring Thomistic Christology
  • Online publication: 24 May 2023
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009221504.001
Available formats
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